Quote:
Originally Posted by engunneer
yes, but the rule has other restrictions beyond "flexible". I would be shocked if this rope is not submitted as a Q&A question. that will give you a definitive answer. Until such an answer exists, it is Schrodinger's Glass Bead Rope.
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Your initial post on this subject disqualified the rope because a glass bead isn't flexible (even though glass is a liquid?) Blue note completely conflits with your definition of flexible.
A fiber is really just a small piece of anything. see webster below.
Definition of fiber
1
: a thread or a structure or object resembling a thread: as
a (1) : a slender root (as of a grass) (2) : an elongated tapering thick-walled plant cell void at maturity that imparts elasticity, flexibility, and tensile strength
b (1) : a strand of nerve tissue : axon, dendrite (2) : one of the filaments composing most of the intercellular matrix of connective tissue (3) : one of the elongated contractile cells of muscle tissue
c : a slender and greatly elongated natural or synthetic filament (as of wool, cotton, asbestos, gold, glass, or rayon) typically capable of being spun into yarn
d : mostly indigestible material in food that stimulates the intestine to peristalsis —called also bulk, roughage
So what exactly is your reason for saying this isn't legal?